It is likely that enhanced citrate synthase activity contributes to the conversion of glucose to lipids in pancreatic cancer providing substrate for membrane lipids synthesis.
Nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which is the most severe histologic form of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), is emerging as the most common clinically important form of liver disease in obese patients. The prevalence of NASH may increase with the rise in the rate of obesity and metabolic syndrome in affluent communities. The aim of this work is to describe clinical and histopathologic findings and correlate liver tissue damage to the length of duration of the obesity in the group of patients who underwent surgery as obesity treatment. Eighty-seven severely or morbidly obese patients underwent gastroplasty. Each patient was evaluated with complete clinical and laboratory medical assessment together with wedge liver biopsy taken from 59 unselected patients during the surgery. Patients were followed up for 41 months. Repeat liver biopsy was taken from 10 patients. Pathologic analysis recorded the presence and degree of steatosis, portal and lobular inflammation and fibrosis. Age, body mass index (BMI), and laboratory assessment correlated with pathologic data. Male patients showed more pronounced metabolic syndrome and fatty liver damage. Patients who become obese in childhood or as teenagers showed no differences in metabolic syndrome and NAFLD in mature age. There was statistically significant association between BMA, elevated transaminases, NAFLD, and fibrosis. Significant weight reduction was observed within first year after surgery, was slower in the second year, and stabilized within third year. Remarkable improvement followed in biological markers of metabolic syndrome. Ninety-six percent of initial liver biopsies had steatosis; 16% developed steatohepatitis and mild perivenular fibrosis. Significant improvement of the degenerative and inflammatory hepatic lesions in repeated biopsies and liver function readings was noted within 8 months after surgery. Obesity is a major and independent risk factor for the metabolic syndrome, NAFLD, NASH, and fibrosis. Surgical treatment improves metabolic abnormalities and hepatic lesions in long-term observations.
Frequent minor side effects are associated with sulfasalazine. The realization that it is the 5-aminosalicylic acid moiety that is the active component of sulfasalazine and that the side effects are probably due to the sulfapyridine has prompted the search for a similar but safer compound. Olsalazine, consisting of two molecules of 5-ASA without sulfasalazine may avoid the problems due to sulfasalazine. One hundred one patients were entered into a double-blind placebo-controlled study of the use of olsalazine (2 g daily) in preventing relapse in patients who had recently recovered from an acute attack of ulcerative colitis. Patients were treated for 12 months. Forty-nine were randomized to olsalazine (39 with limited and 10 with extensive disease) and 52 to placebo (42 with limited and 10 with extensive disease). Life-table analysis showed that the median time to relapse in patients on olsalazine was 342 days, which was significantly longer than the 100 days in the placebo group (P = 0.024). The most important side effect experienced with olsalazine that necessitated withdrawal from the study was "drug-induced diarrhea" in 16% (8/49). There was a similar incidence of minor side effects reported in the two groups, and in no patients were major or dangerous side effects reported. In patients who did not develop diarrhea, olsalazine was well tolerated and successfully prevented rapid relapse in the recently ill patients entered into this study.
The aim ofthis study was Reinfection is uncommon. (Gut 1995; 36: 544-547)
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